Two more US-listed stocks flee to Hong Kong as US-China ties fray
The two Chinese companies joined the march that began with Alibaba’s US$13 billion secondary listing in Hong Kong last November, the first such stock offer on the city’s bourse. That was followed in quick order by NetEase, JD. Com and Yum China Holdings, which together raised US$10 billion to help Hong Kong catch up with New York as the worlds favourite IPO destination this year.
Two more US-listed stocks flee to Hong Kong as US-China ties fray
The two Chinese companies joined the march that began with Alibaba’s US$13 billion secondary listing in Hong Kong last November, the first such stock offer on the city’s bourse. That was followed in quick order by NetEase, JD. Com and Yum China Holdings, which together raised US$10 billion to help Hong Kong catch up with New York as the worlds favourite IPO destination this year.